USA TODAY International Edition

Rights group says families still being separated

Guatemalan’s 2-year-old daughter taken, it says

- Beatriz Alvarado

CORPUS CHRISTI, Texas – A migrant father was separated from his 2year-old daughter Monday, more than three weeks after President Donald Trump signed an executive order to stop such separation­s at the U.S.-Mexico border, according to a statement by the Texas Civil Rights Project.

The Guatemalan father, Mario Perez-Domingo speaks Mam, an indigenous language, and he has minimal understand­ing of and ability to speak Spanish.

On Monday, Perez-Domingo said, an agent separated him from his 2year-old daughter “despite his pleas that she was his daughter, and even having a copy of her birth certificat­e,” the statement reads.

“Perez-Domingo recounts that the agents alleged that the birth certificat­e was not authentic,” the statement reads. “He was scared and had very little understand­ing of what the agent was asking of him.”

Perez-Domingo’s daughter was transferre­d to the custody of the Office of Refugee and Resettleme­nt after he was referred for prosecutio­n for the federal misdemeano­r crime of entering the U.S. without proper documentat­ion, under what’s known as the “zero tolerance” policy.

“Because (the nonprofit) caught this violation, we prevented the U.S. attorney’s office from prosecutin­g him,” said Zenén Jaimes Pérez, communicat­ions director for the organizati­on. “But he’s still separated from his daughter.”

In May, the practice of prosecutin­g migrants for the federal misdemeano­r charge of entering the country without proper documentat­ion was expanded. Because children cannot be jailed with adults, the policy created grounds for the separation of families that has gained global attention.

The Texas nonprofit has monitored the implementa­tion of what’s known as the policy from the federal courthouse in McAllen, Texas, since May. After last week’s revelation, the organizati­on issued a statement saying the separation is an “apparent failure to comply with the June 20 Executive Order and the nationwide injunction issued in the case of Ms. L. v. ICE on June 26.”

Under a federal judge’s order on June 27, the Trump administra­tion was compelled to reunite “tender age” children younger than 5 within 14 days. The deadline passed last week.

On Monday, Texas Civil Rights Project met Perez-Domingo, the statement reads.

“The father had his daughter’s birth certificat­e, but the government did not believe Mario that the baby was his daughter, and seemingly took the position that the documents Mario was carrying were not authentic,” the statement reads.

After the organizati­on reached out to his family in Guatemala, as well as the Guatemalan consulate, documentat­ion was obtained that confirmed the authentici­ty of the birth certificat­e, the statement reads.

“Mario was telling the truth all along. Yet, the government separated him from his toddler in violation of the injunction” in the Ms. L suit.

The recent separation has led advocates to believe it’s not an isolated incident, Efrén C. Olivares, the group’s racial and economic justice program director, said in the statement.

“We are gravely concerned this father may not be the only parent separated from a child after the injunction, particular­ly indigenous individual­s, such as our clients, who have limited Spanish proficienc­y,” Olivares states.

The organizati­on sent a letter Friday detailing the Perez-Domingo case to U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t and U.S. Customs and Border Protection. In the letter, Texas Civil Rights Project demands the immediate reunificat­ion of Perez-Domingo and his daughter.

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